Dozens Attend Memorial for Slain Ghanaian Journalist

Dozens Attend Memorial for Slain Ghanaian Journalist

Dozens Attend Memorial for Slain Ghanaian Journalist

Dozens of people gathered in Ghana's capital on Friday to pay tribute to an investigative journalist who was killed after helping to expose corruption in African football.

Ahmed Hussein-Suale, part of a team that carried out an undercover investigation, was gunned down in the Madina suburb of Accra on 16 January. The shooting was a rare assault on the press in Ghana, which prides itself as being one of the most stable democracies in an often turbulent region, and a beacon of media freedom. Many of the lawmakers, diplomats, politicians and journalists who gathered for the memorial called for justice to prevail. "Hussein-Suale's case must be resolved, and the perpetrators brought to book," said Roland Affail Monney, president of the Ghana Journalists Association, under whose auspices the ceremony was held.

Male Tanzanian MPs face circumcision call

DAR ES SALAAM -- A female MP in Tanzania has called for checks to determine whether or not her male colleagues have undergone circumcision - a procedure known to reduce the risk of HIV transmission. Jackline Ngonyani said any MPs found not to have been circumcised should be required to undergo the procedure. Her suggestion divided opinion among her colleagues. HIV is seen as a major threat to public health in Tanzania. Around 70% of the male population is circumcised. Around 5% of Tanzania's adult population is believed to have been infected by HIV-AIDS, giving it the 13th highest rate of infection in the world, according to figures from 2016. The World Health Organisation says circumcision reduces the risk of heterosexual men contracting HIV by around 60%.

Tunisia militants jailed over 2015 terror

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Nigerians frustrated ahead of vote

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